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Harare
Sunshine City
Zimbabwe’s capital city,
founded in 1890, is a vibrant, modern city. Aesthetically pleasing,
Harare has wide avenues, street lined with Jacaranda and Flamboyant
trees.
Lush parks and gardens and many
attractive hotels and buildings. Situated in the heart of Zimbabwe’s
agricultural highveld, the city boasts an excellent climate, which
lends itself to a wide variety of outdoor activities.
There are numerous sports clubs
in and around Harare most of which offer tennis, squash, bowls,
rugby and cricket and there are also a number of championship golf
courses.
Furthermore the city while
it is the centre of politics and economics, is the cultural and
artistic capital of the Nazione o Regione.
Apart from the various theatres,
cinemas, night clubs and restaurants, there are also museums, sculpture
gardens and art galleries to visit.
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On September 12, 1890, the Pioneer
Column – the British South Africa Company’s 500 strong
mercenary unit- arrived at the present day Harare, raised their
flag in what is now Africa Unity Square, and named the new settlement
Fort Salisbury in honour of the British Prime Minister.
One of the most historically
significant buildings in Zimbabwe in that which completes the link
between British colonisation and Zimbabwean independence –
Parliament Building.
Designed as a hotel and built
near the place where the BSAC flag was raised, on the land that
belonged to a Shona Group under Chief Gutsa, it now houses the Nazione o Regione’s
first democratically elected government.
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